Soccer-Diaz fuels Colombia's hopes on World Cup return


Soccer Football - International Friendly - Colombia v Costa Rica - Estadio Nemesio Camacho El Campin, Bogota, Colombia - June 1, 2026 Colombia's Luis Diaz reacts REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez

BOGOTA, June 2 (Reuters) - Colombia return to the World Cup after an eight-year absence counting on forward ⁠Luis Diaz to meet high expectations following a season in which he was directly involved ‌in more than 40 goals for Bayern Munich.

After failing to qualify for the 2022 tournament in Qatar, Colombia appointed Nestor Lorenzo for his first international head-coaching job, tasking the 60-year-old Argentine with building a physically strong, attack-minded side centred on Diaz.

They secured third place ​in the South American qualifiers, scoring fewer goals only than reigning ⁠world champions Argentina, with Diaz netting seven ⁠times in the campaign, one behind top scorer Lionel Messi.

The "Cafeteros," as they are nicknamed in the nation known ⁠for ‌its high-quality coffee, defeated both Brazil and Argentina in qualifying and finished runners-up to Argentina at the 2024 Copa America - their best result since winning it in 2001.

Their home win over Brazil in ⁠late 2023 came at an especially delicate time for Diaz, who ​scored twice in the match played ‌shortly after his parents were kidnapped by a local guerrilla group in the still violence-marred country.

While ⁠his mother was ​released the same day, Diaz's father remained in the rebels' custody for 12 days. The National Liberation Army (ELN) said at the time the kidnapping was a "mistake."

"It was the most difficult moment of my life," said the striker, who was then ⁠playing for Liverpool.

He found immediate success after signing for Bayern ​for an estimated 75 million euros ($86.95 million) in July 2025, winning the Bundesliga title and helping them to reach the Champions League semi-finals.

Bayern manager Vincent Kompany described him as a "machine" with a "kind of chaotic creativity," while Colombian great ⁠Carlos Valderrama said Diaz had already surpassed his own achievements.

Colombia head to North America this month hoping to leave behind memories of their 1994 campaign in the United States, when the Valderrama-led team were tipped as favourites by soccer great Pele but ended up eliminated in the group stage.

The South American side debut in Group ​K on June 17 against Uzbekistan in Mexico City, before facing Portugal ⁠and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Diaz will have support from 34-year-old James Rodriguez, who inspired Colombia's run to the ​quarter-finals in 2014 but has had underwhelming club spells in recent ‌years, and Sporting forward Luis Suarez.

"We have a great ​team. I'm really excited for my first World Cup," Diaz said.

($1 = 0.8626 euros)

(Reporting by Luis Jaime Acosta in Bogota and Gabriel Araujo in Sao Paulo; Editing by Javier Leira and Christian Radnedge)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Football

Soccer-Liverpool great Dalglish reveals cancer diagnosis
Soccer-Norway dream big but defensive doubts cloud potential fairytale
Soccer-Panama target first World Cup match win under Dane Christiansen
Soccer-Egypt chase first World Cup win with Salah still key
Soccer-England's World Cup puzzle: Promise, dependence on Kane, search for identity
Soccer-Montella sticks with experience in Turkey World Cup squad
Soccer-Austria's Baumgartner to miss World Cup due to injury
Soccer-South Africa assistant coach Mkhalele cleared to travel to Mexico
Soccer-Senegal offer Africa shot at World Cup glory
Soccer-Last dance for Deschamps as France chase World Cup glory again

Others Also Read